Justin Ross Harris listens to jury selection during his trial at the Glynn County Courthouse in Brunswick, Ga., Monday, Oct. 3, 2016. Harris charged with murder after his toddler son died two years ago... (Stephen B. Morton)

(Newser)
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A Georgia man charged with killing his toddler son wept in court Tuesday as his attorney told a jury the child's death two years ago inside a hot SUV is certainly the father's fault, but he committed no crime. Attorney Maddox Kilgore told jurors during the second day of the trial that Justin Ross Harris forgot his son was in the back seat because of a simple change in routine—he took the boy with him to breakfast that morning, though he usually dropped 22-month-old Cooper off at daycare before eating. "What you're going to see here at this trial is that being responsible is not the same thing as being a criminal," Kilgore told the jury in his opening statement.

Prosecutors say Harris actually plotted to kill his son, hoping to escape his family responsibilities to focus on sexual liaisons he was having with prostitutes and women he met online. Kilgore told jurors they will indeed hear about "immoral sexual behavior" and "graphic, filthy sexual talk" by his client, the AP reports. He said Harris "has earned every bit of shame that's coming his way." But Harris was also planning a future with his wife and son—from planning a family cruise at the time of Cooper's death to talking with a real estate agent about finding a larger house in a good school district, Kilgore said.

"Parents" have been killing, neglecting, abusing and torturing their children since the beginning of time. If a woman has a right to choose life or death for her children so does a man. It's all good. Let him go.

El

Oct 5, 2016 8:34 PM CDT

Gueorgui Gueorgiiev....................................Please show some sense........do some serious research!! Down's Syndrome is NOT a mental illness.

Gueorgui Gueorguiev

Oct 5, 2016 8:00 PM CDT

Judging from his facial features, this man is afflicted by "Down's syndrome", or some other similar mental illness. Doesn't such condition require absolving?